Shadow Family Night

Don’t miss our performance at the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Shadow Family Night this Friday! From 5-8pm in the Kogod Courtyard, the museum will be offering free performances and activities for children and their families. Stop by our table and make a shadow puppet, then stay to see our brand-new shadow puppet show, called Coyote Places the Stars. This new tale was inspired by a story from the Wasco Indian Nation and you can see Genna drawing a few of the puppets below. We hope to see you on Friday at the museum!

Genna drawing

January Grab Bag

Some interesting puppet-related links and videos from around the world that I came across this month:

1. Titeres Monini is a puppet company from Mexico. This video of their show telling the story of the Meso-American feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl shows their truly stunning shadow puppets.

2. Salt & Poppet Theater from Australia created the shadow puppets in this video. The poem was written and read by Neil Gaiman. Note to self: new goal is to create puppets for a poem by a favorite author.

3. When I was performing in the Avignon Off Festival in 2009, one of my favorite shows that I saw was an Italian version of Sleeping Beauty called Rosaspina that included puppets. After a little digging, I found the show on YouTube! It still makes me smile.

4. Perchance to Dream is a theater company from New York that is now starting to produce in D.C! Welcome! Everyone should go see their production of Twelfth Night (it has puppets!!) at Fort Fringe that starts on February 8. More info and ticket sales can be found here.

5. Shaun Tan has a new book! It’s actually a museum catalogue called The Oopsatoreum and it details the (fictional) inventions of a fictional inventor named Henry Mintox. The book was produced for the Sydney Powerhouse Museum (I wish the Smithsonian museums had cool names like that) and goes with an exhibition that they are putting together this year. More information is on Tan’s website here.

Store Spotlight: Fragers Hardware

Buying materials at a regular hardware store when you are a puppeteer is a process that can be awkward and frustrating. The fact is that you are often buying items which you are going to use in an unconventional fashion, and occasionally it is hard for hardware store people to accept that. Add to that the fact that I’m a woman, which apparently makes the employees of some places (cough, Logan Hardware, cough) automatically assume that I don’t know what I’m talking about. I’ve gotten strange looks in many different hardware stores around the city, except for one.

Fragers Hardware

That is Fragers Hardware, a landmark of Eastern Market that has been in business since 1920. They are located at 1115 Pennsylvania Ave SE and occupy three distinct buildings–a hardware store, paint store and equipment rental store. Whenever I go to Fragers, there is always someone free to answer questions or give advice and when I explain that I am a puppeteer looking for materials, they nod and say “Oh, cool!” They always have what I am looking for, or are able to order it easily. If you appreciate stores where everyone is given time and consideration, make this your source for hardware in D.C.

The hardware room, where we spend lots of time searching for that perfect size nut or bolt.

The hardware room, where we spend lots of time searching for that perfect size nut or bolt.

Aisle full of supplies for puppet projects or home repair.

Aisle full of supplies for puppet projects or home repair.

We think this sign is entirely appropriate!

We think this sign is entirely appropriate!

New Education Page!

This is just a quick update to say that our Education Page has gotten a makeover! Now we have more information about the workshops that we offer, as well as photos of past workshops and puppets that the students made. Go take a look and admire the fantastic creativity of these kids! If you know a school looking for a unique arts event to offer, send them our way!

Workshop 6

Calling all Baltimore puppet fans!

Puppet SlamwichAnyone looking for a fun, unique (and cheap!) night out this Saturday? Look no further than the Puppet Slamwich being presented by Black Cherry Puppet Theater in Baltimore!

For those who have never experienced this kind of event, a puppet slam is a night of short acts by various puppeteers, sometimes with music, that allows performers to experiment with new and different material. For puppeteers who primarily work in children’s theater, this is often a venue for more adult-oriented content; for others it’s an opportunity to workshop unusual ideas.

We will be presenting an excerpt from the first half of The Amazing and Marvelous Cabinets of Kismet, so if you can come, you will be able to see the FIRST EVER glimpse of this brand new show. Black Cherry is located at 1115 Hollins St. Baltimore MD and directions can be found on their website here. Tickets for the event are $7 and can be purchased at  http://www.brownpapertickets.com .

We hope to see you there!

Building Kismet #3

Genna and I experimented with adding controls to some old characters last week, including Swirl Dancer, here:

Genna operating Swirl Dancer.

Genna operating Swirl Dancer.

We also created Mophead, a friend for Kismet, who is made of odd plastic pieces and fabric scraps:

He's a colorful character.

He’s a colorful character.

Kismet and Mophead

Kismet and Mophead

Crazy Hair and Snakes

Some photos of puppets created by students at Friends Community School in College Park, Maryland:

There were no socks, so this student created the same shape with folded fabric and gave him a jingle bell hat!

There were no socks, so this student created the same shape with folded fabric and gave him a jingle bell hat!

Crazy hair added to a cork with electrical wire legs makes a fun character.

Crazy hair added to a cork with electrical wire legs makes a fun character.

This student gave her marionette VERY long strings so her tall father could hold it!

This student gave her marionette VERY long strings so her tall father could hold it!

 

The Simplest Drawing

As we continue creating characters for The Amazing and Marvelous Cabinets of Kismet, much of the process is about simplifying, stripping down and finding the bare minimum of lines and texture that communicate the essence of a character. Here is a quote from fantasy master Terry Pratchett about how even very simple art contains magic.

The White Horse of Uffington in England, which Pratchett often describes in a similar way.

The White Horse of Uffington in England, which Pratchett often describes in a similar way.
CC licensed image via Flickr

“Someone had drawn a tree. It was the simplest drawing of a tree the Bursar had ever seen since he’d been old enough to read books that weren’t mostly pictures, but it was also in some strange way the most accurate. It was simple because something complex had been rolled up small; as if someone had drawn trees, and started with the normal green cloud on a stick, and refined it, and refined it some more, and looked for the little twists in a line that said tree and refined those until there was just one line that said TREE.

And now when you looked at it you could hear the wind in the branches…”

Store Spotlight: SCRAP DC

In many ways, SCRAP DC is like your average craft or fabric store. There are paintbrushes and oil pastels, yarn and fabric by the yard. But there are also corks, odd electrical parts, wood samples and drapery tassels. And everything is far cheaper than you would find at a regular store. That’s because everything at SCRAP is secondhand and for a puppet-maker, there is no better supply store in town.

SCRAP sign

The front door at SCRAP.

Bulletin Board at SCRAP

The bulletin board full of announcements at SCRAP DC

SCRAP DC is located at 52 O St. NW, a short walk from NOMA-Galludet Metro station and right near the intersection of North Capitol St. and New York Ave. The materials they sell are all donated, so the stock changes often. If you are lucky, you’ll go in on a day when a box of high quality art supplies has come in and you can find $30 paintbrushes for $3. We tend to focus on the fabric and yarn, sewing supplies and scraps of wood and plastic which call out to be turned into puppets. For a teacher looking for project supplies, parents looking for ways to keep kids busy and artists on a budget, SCRAP is the place to go!

Paper, cardboard and boxes.

Paper, cardboard and boxes.

Boxes of trims and bolts of fabric.

Boxes of trims and bolts of fabric.

Wall of fabric remnants at SCRAP DC.

Wall of fabric remnants at SCRAP DC.